Binge TV viewing means never losing track of the plot

Toth watched all five seasons of the AMC series Mad Men from his sickbed in a two-week viewing binge. He became so captivated by its fictional admen that he began sporting skinny ties and drinking Old-Fashioned cocktails.

“The nuances of the story lines are getting so complicated — they’re introducing characters in Episode 2 and that character comes back in Episode 6 — I can digest things a lot quicker and easier when I binge on them,” the 44-year-old Denver resident said.

Toth has lots of company. Services such as Netflix and Hulu, as well as digital video recorders, have transformed the TV viewing experience by enabling viewers to devour multiple episodes or even entire seasons of The Wire or Downton Abbey in marathon viewing sessions.

Now Netflix is making a massive bet that it can satisfy the addiction that it helped create. At 12:01 a.m. Friday the service debuted its first original series, a political drama called House of Cards that stars actor Kevin Spacey as a ruthless, scheming House majority whip.

In a departure from television tradition, the entire season of House of Cards — all 13 episodes, nearly 13 hours of tense Capitol Hill drama — will be available at once, with the click of a button.

Millions of Americans are binge-viewing serialized dramas and comedies, including those that can no longer be found on the network prime-time schedule. Hits like the espionage thriller 24 and cult favourites such as Arrested Development, which both ran on the Fox network, have found new life on Netflix, as have past seasons of FX’s American Horror Story and ABC Family’s Pretty Little Liars.

The phenomenon is so pervasive that a majority of Americans ages 8 to 66 say they’ve engaged in this sort of copious TV consumption, according to a study conducted by media consultant Frank N. Magid Associates Inc.

“We’re finding that people who binge-view once binge-view again,” Magid Executive vice president Jack MacKenzie said. “It’s the ‘you can’t eat just one’ kind of thing.”

Hollywood has always fed audiences a diet of, “Wait a week and we’ll give you new episodes, then wait a season, we’ll give you another season,” Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos said.

“The internet is attuning people to get what they want when they want it,” Sarandos said. House of Cards is literally the first show for the on-demand generation.”

“We wanted to go all-in,” Sarandos said. “It’s important to signal ... that we’re moving into this space in a meaningful, big way. So we did it loud.”

If successful, the gambit could begin to unwind 60 years of serialized television convention — especially if others begin to emulate Netflix’s approach. So far, broadcast and cable programmers have shown no inclination to release multiple episodes simultaneously.

“I don’t think one show changes the television industry,” said Richard Greenfield, media analyst with BTIG. But “if this become replicated multiple times over by Netflix and others, absolutely.”

The instant-availability formula dispenses with cliffhangers designed to prevent the audience from fleeing during commercial breaks and woo them back for next week’s instalment. There is no need for comprehensive recaps of the previous week’s episode because Netflix assumes that viewers won’t miss a beat.

The absence of ads means that each episode has more time for story lines and relationships — as much as 15 more minutes of story per television hour.

Fox executives first noticed the binge-viewing phenomenon with 24 as fans bought DVDs of the Kiefer Sutherland drama, with some people watching multiple episodes in a single weekend.

Netflix said the practice exploded with Breaking Bad, the AMC drama starring Bryan Cranston as a cancer-ridden chemistry teacher turned meth dealer. The service found that 74 per cent of subscribers who began with a single episode of the first season ended up watching the entire run. The percentages were even higher when Netflix studied subsequent seasons.

Vince Gilligan, creator of Breaking Bad, said these changing viewing habits are liberating writers from the conventional wisdom that individual TV episodes should be self-contained and stand on their own. Breaking Bad broke those rules and has seen its viewership grow every season, which is unusual for a serialized drama.

“I’d love to attribute that to how wonderful a show we have,” Gilligan said. “But if I’m being honest, I realize we’re riding a wave, a very new wave, that has been very beneficial to us and to other serialized shows.”

To be sure, all-you-can-eat viewing is not a new phenomenon.

Networks broadcast TV “marathons” to provide catch-up viewing and create anticipation for a new season of a returning show. The boxed set, containing a complete season’s worth of TV shows, has made for countless lost weekends.

The DVR made it possible for viewers to record an entire season’s worth of a show, to be watched in big gulps later. Some viewers even record a whole season of a new show without watching a single episode until they’re all recorded. If they don’t like the first episode they abandon the series. If they do, they spend a weekend bingeing.

But binge-viewing threatens to shake up television’s status quo. Along with the DVR, it’s another harbinger of the end of the time-honoured network schedule, when executives dictated when viewers could watch a favourite show, said Jeffrey Cole, director of the USC Annenberg School Center for the Digital Future.

“It’s the viewer saying, ‘I will watch it how I want to watch it — in some cases without commercials,’” Cole said. “It’s television on my terms.”